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At Italy On This Day you will read about events and festivals, about important moments in history, and about the people who have made Italy the country it is today, and where they came from. Italy is a country rich in art and music, fashion and design, food and wine, sporting achievement and political diversity. Italy On This Day provides fascinating insights to help you enjoy it all the more.

Saturday, 22 April 2017

Alida Valli - actress

Scandal dogged star admired by Mussolini

The actress Alida Valli, who was once described by Benito
Mussolini as the most beautiful woman in the world after Greta Garbo, died on
this day in 2006 at the age of 84.

One of the biggest stars in Italian cinema in the late 1930s
and 40s, when she starred in numerous romantic dramas and comedies, she was
best known outside Italy for playing Anna Schmidt, the actress girlfriend of
Harry Lime in Carol Reed’s Oscar-winning 1949 classic The Third Man.

She was cast in the role by the producer David O Selznick,
who shared the Fascist leader’s appreciation for her looks, and who billed her
simply as Valli, hoping it would create for her a Garboesque enigmatic
allure. Later, however, she complained
that having one name made her “feel silly”.

Valli was born in Pola, Istria, then part of Italy (now
Pula, Croatia), in 1921. She was christened Baroness Alida Maria Laura Altenburger
von Marckenstein-Frauenberg, on account of a noble line to her paternal
grandfather, Baron Luigi Altenburger, an Austrian-Italian from Trento and a
descendant of the Counts d’Arco.

Her father was a journalist and professor. The family moved
to Como when she was young but her father died when she was a teenager, after
which she and her mother moved to Rome, where she enrolled at the capital's new
film school, Centro Sperimentale.

She had no expectations of making a career in movies but the
Centro's teachers recognised her talent. The name Alida Valli was invented for
her, and in 1937 she made five films, each one more successful than the last.
Consequently, her salary went up with each production. When she realised her
earnings could support her whole family, she decided that it was a career worth
taking seriously.

Alida Valli with Joseph Cotten in The Third Man

After a number of comedies and costume dramas, she won
acclaim for more serious roles in Picolo mondo antico (1941) and We the Living
(1942). The latter saw her star opposite Rossano Brazzi as tragic lovers in
post-revolutionary St Petersburg, which pleased the Fascist regime because it
seemed to convey an anti-communist message.

She felt uncomfortable about being linked with the Mussolini
regime, however, especially when an anonymous letter to the United States embassy
in Rome stalled her application for a visa to work in the US. The letter
accused her of Fascist sympathies and being romantically involved with Hitler's
propanganda chief Joseph Goebbels. The visa was granted, but only after Selznick's
lawyers had disproved the allegations.

After Alida returned to Europe, she moved into more serious
roles in films such as Luchino Visconti'sSenso (1954) and Michelangelo Antonioni's
Il Grido (1957), which had won her praise and confirmed that her beauty was
underpinned with genuine acting ability.

Her success was overshadowed, however, by her relationship
with Piero Piccioni, the son of Italy’s foreign minister, Attilio Piccioni, who
was implicated in a sex and drugs scandal – the so-called Montesi scandal - that emerged following the discovery of a young
woman’s body on a beach near Ostia Antica, the old Roman resort, in 1953.

Piccioni was acquitted of any culpability in the woman’s
death after Valli confirmed that she and Piccioni were together in Amalfi, 200
miles away, at the time, staying in a villa as guests of Carlo Ponti. Valli had by then separated from her husband,
Oscar De Mejo.

Valli with Stewart Granger in Luchino Visconti's Senso

During the next decade Alida struggled to rebuild her film career
and turned to working more in theatre and television, before her reputation was
re-established with parts in such films as Pier Paolo Pasolini'sOedipus Rex (1967) and
Bernardo Bertolucci'sThe Spider's Strategem (1970), 1900 (1976) and La Luna
(1979).

Valli encountered tragedy in her personal life when her
lover as a young actress, the fighter pilot Carlo Cugnasca, was killed in
action over Africa. In 1944, Alida married De Mejo, a jazz pianist, with whom
she had a son, Carlo, in 1945, by which time Alida had been offered a Hollywood
contract. They had another son, Larry,
but parted after eight years.

Valli's death at her home in Rome was announced by the
office of the mayor of Rome, Walter Veltroni. The Italian president, CarloAzeglio Ciampi, described her passing as “a great loss for the cinema, the
theatre and Italian culture.”

The 15th century facade of Como's Duomo

Travel tip:

Como, where Valli grew up, can be found at the southern tip
of the eastern branch of Lake Como. It is a pleasant town with an impressive
cathedral in the historical centre, the construction of which spanned almost
350 years, which is why it combines features from different architectural
areas, including Gothic and Renaissance. The façade was built in 1457, its characteristic
rose window and a portal flanked by Renaissance statues of Pliny the Elder and
Pliny the Younger, both of whom were from Como. This Duomo replaced the earlier
10th-century cathedral, San Fedele.

The Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia can be found off
Via Tuscolana to the south of Rome, nextdoor to the Cinecittà studio complex. It
is the oldest film school in Western Europe, founded in 1935 during the Mussolini
era by his head of cinema, Luigi Freddi. It is still financed by the Italian
government to provide training, research and experimentation in the field of cinema. Apart from Alida Valli, other actors and
actresses to have emerged from the school include Claudia Cardinale, Domenico Modugnoand Francesca Neri. Directors among the alumni include Michelangelo
Antonioni, Giuseppe De Santis and Luigi Zampa.

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THE SHOOTING IN SORRENTO

The Shooting in Sorrento, a new crime novel set in the southern Italy resort, is now available from Amazon.
It is the second Butler and Bartorelli mystery by Val Culley, following Death in the High City, which was set in Bergamo in Lombardy.The book - written for readers who prefer the 'cosy crime' genre - features journalist Kate Butler and her partner, Steve Bartorelli, who is a retired Detective Chief Inspector.They are in Sorrento for the wedding of the daughter of one of Steve’s Italian cousins.When tragedy strikes an English family staying at their hotel, Kate feels she has to help.She joins forces with another visitor to Sorrento to investigate after it becomes clear the Italian police aren’t looking further than the English family.

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NOTICE

All facts given on this website have been carefully researched and are published by the Italy On This Day Editor in good faith. All travel advice, hotel and restaurant recommendations are based on information that has been checked and was correct at the time of writing.